Blurb:Wanted.It’s something I’ve had to get used to since being placed on the government’s Most Wanted list. On the run, with my family and Finn by my side, we now have to evade not only the Arvies, but teams of soldiers sent to find and capture me.

Little do they know, I’m battling my own demons. After the receiving large doses of mind-enhancing serum, a monster has been unleashed inside my mind. It promises death and destruction; its power, greater than anything I could imagine. Now, I’m too dangerous, and the lives of my loved ones depend on my separation from the group. I must leave and face the hostile world alone.

My name is Abigail Park. I will do whatever it takes to save the ones I love.

Tag Line: Sometimes all you need is hope . . . and Hellfire.

Voted 2013 Break Out Author by Young Adult & Teen Readers, and 2013 Book of the Year (Hidden Wings).Cameo Renae was born in San Francisco, raised in Maui, Hawaii, and recently moved with her husband and children to Alaska.
She’s a daydreamer and a caffeine and peppermint addict who loves to laugh, loves to read, and loves to escape reality. One of her greatest joys is creating fantasy worlds filled with adventure and romance and sharing it with others.
One day she hopes to find her own magic wardrobe and ride away on her magical unicorn. Until then…she’ll keep writing!HAPPY READING!

Head-hopping is when a writer has multiple POVs in one scene. I happen to write this way, but I had no idea that it was a forbidden style of writing in the publishing world. I’ve always written this way. I didn’t know it was considered to be wrong until I was published the third time.

I enjoy multiple POVs in one scene because I like to know how my main characters feel about a certain situation. I don’t know why, but I can’t seem to wrap my head around focusing on one character for an entire story. I even find it difficult to stick to one POV per scene, and then just switch from character to character depending on who happens to be the star of that particular scene. I like to get everyone’s thoughts on the matter.

Well, brace yourselves, world…Wages of Sin will not be following these guidelines. That’s right, we’re breaking the rules of writing. Wages of Sin switches POVs in a single scene. To me, it’s the most natural thing in the world and not at all confusing or irritating to read.

Of course, I am the writer, and so I’m curious…is there anyone out there willing to give this forbidden writing style a chance?

Would everyone be so kind as to support my Thunderclap? It would be much appreciated, and I will gladly return the favor!

For those of you who have no idea what a Thunderclap is, here’s how it works:

Click on the support button (you can support with Twitter, Tumblr, or Facebook). On the day the book is released (April 5th), the message will post once on your chosen page. The message (in picture above) will include a link for people to purchase the book. That’s it!

It doesn’t cost you anything except the minute it takes you to click “support”. Please help me get the word out on Wages of Sin: Bad Blood! This is a promotion for the book. If I don’t get 100 supporters, the message will not be sent out, and the book loses all of that promotion.